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Journal of Virology, August 2000, p. 7568-7577, Vol. 74, No. 16
0022-538X/00/$04.00+0
Copyright © 2000, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Essential and Dispensable Virus-Encoded Replication
Elements Revealed by Efforts To Develop Hypoviruses as Gene
Expression Vectors
Nobuhiro
Suzuki,
Lynn M.
Geletka, and
Donald L.
Nuss*
Center for Agricultural Biotechnology,
University of Maryland Biotechnology Institute, University
of Maryland, College Park, Maryland 20742
Received 18 February 2000/Accepted 15 May 2000
We have investigated whether hypoviruses, viral agents responsible
for virulence attenuation (hypovirulence) of the chestnut blight fungus
Cryphonectria parasitica, could serve as gene expression vectors. The infectious cDNA clone of the prototypic hypovirus CHV1-EP713 was modified to generate 20 different vector candidates. Although transient expression was achieved for a subset of vectors that
contained the green fluorescent protein gene from Aequorea victoria, long-term expression (past day 8) was not observed for any vector construct. Analysis of viral RNAs recovered from transfected fungal colonies revealed that the foreign genes were readily deleted from the replicating virus, although small portions of foreign sequences were retained by some vectors after months of replication. However, the results of vector viability and progeny characterization provided unexpected new insights into essential and dispensable elements of hypovirus replication. The N-terminal portion (codons 1 to
24) of the 5'-proximal open reading frame (ORF), ORF A, was found to be
required for virus replication, while the remaining 598 codons of this
ORF were completely dispensable. Substantial alterations were tolerated
in the pentanucleotide UAAUG that contains the ORF A termination codon
and the overlapping putative initiation codon of the second of the two
hypovirus ORFs, ORF B. Replication competence was maintained following
either a frameshift mutation that caused a two-codon extension of ORF A
or a modification that produced a single-ORF genomic organization.
These results are discussed in terms of determinants of hypovirus
replication, the potential utility of hypoviruses as gene expression
vectors, and possible mechanisms by which hypoviruses recognize and
delete foreign sequences.
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Center for
Agricultural Biotechnology, University of Maryland Biotechnology
Institute, Plant Sciences Bldg., Rm. 5115, College Park, MD 20742-4450. Phone: (301) 405-0334. Fax: (301) 314-9075. E-mail:
nuss{at}umbi.umd.edu.
Journal of Virology, August 2000, p. 7568-7577, Vol. 74, No. 16
0022-538X/00/$04.00+0
Copyright © 2000, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
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